A securing mechanism for retaining a daughter board upon the primary board includes a base, which is moveably assembled upon the main board, and a latch assembled upon the base and moveable between a locking position and an unlocking position. The base forms a support platform upwardly abutting against the underside of the daughter board and equipped with an arc protrusion for receipt within a notch of the daughter board, and a grounding piece with one end mechanically and electrically connecting a grounding pad of the daughter board and the other end mechanically and electrically connecting a grounding pad on the main board. The base forms a horizontal slot to receive the main body so as to retain the base to the main body in position in the vertical direction. The latch forms a pressing face downwardly pressing an upper side of the daughter board.
Legal claims defining the scope of protection, as filed with the USPTO.
2. The electrical assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein said base forms an arc restriction section adapted to be received within a notch of the daughter board.
3. The electrical assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein the mounting section abuts against an underside of the main printed circuit board for preventing the base from being withdrawn from the main printed circuit board.
4. The electrical assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein the opening includes a large part and a small part thereof, and the base is assembled into the opening from the large part to the small part.
5. The electrical assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein in the securing mechanism, one of the base and the latch forms a hole and the other thereof forms a hook structure extending through the hole.
6. The electrical assembly as claimed in claim 5, wherein the hole forms a large section and a small section, and the hook structure extends initially through the large section and successively moves into the small section.
7. The electrical assembly as claimed in claim 6, wherein the base forms the hole and the latch forms the hook structure.
8. The electrical assembly as claimed in claim 1, wherein the base is equipped with a one-piece metallic grounding piece unitarily formed with an upper arm adapted to be connected to a grounding pad of the daughter board and a lower arm adapted to be connected to a grounding pad of the main printed circuit board, the upper arm having an upward-facing contacting surface.
10. The securing mechanism as claimed in claim 9, wherein the base forms a mounting section below the mounting face to extend through the opening and cooperating with the mounting face for sandwiching the printed circuit board therebetween in the vertical direction.
11. The securing mechanism as claimed in claim 10, wherein the opening includes a large part and a small part, and the mounting section initially extends into the large part and successively moves in the small part when the base is assembled to the printed circuit board.
12. The securing mechanism as claimed in claim 9, wherein one of the base and the latch forms an arc restriction section adapted to be received within the notch of the daughter board.
13. The securing mechanism as claimed in claim 12, wherein the arc restriction section is formed on the base.
14. The securing mechanism as claimed in claim 9, wherein the base is further equipped with a one-piece metallic grounding piece unitarily formed with an upper arm adapted to connect to a grounding pad of the daughter board and a lower arm adapted to connect to a grounding pad of the printed circuit board, the upper arm having an upward-facing contacting surface.
15. The securing mechanism as claimed in claim 9, wherein the base forms a tower above the abutting face to cooperate with the abutting face for forming a sliding groove in which the latch is moved.
17. The method as claimed in claim 16, further including a step of assembling the daughter board upon the securing mechanism via rotation when the latch is in the unlocking position.
Cooperative Patent Classification codes for this invention. Click any code to explore related patents in that topic.
November 30, 2020
August 30, 2022
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